Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published November 1973 | public
Journal Article

Carbon nuclear magnetic resonance studies of the histidine residue in α-lytic protease. Implications for the catalytic mechanism of serine proteases

Abstract

Selective ^(13)C enrichment of C-2 of the single histidine residue of the serine protease α-lytic protease has allowed direct study of the Asp-His-Ser catalytic triad. Both the chemical shift of C-2 and the coupling between C-2 and its directly bonded hydrogen have been observed as a function of pH. We interpret the results to indicate that only below pH 4 does the imidazole ring of the histidine residue become protonated and only above pH 6.7 does the aspartic acid residue lose a proton to generate a carboxylate anion. Thus, over the pH range 4-6.7, the catalytic triad consists of a neutral aspartic acid and a neutral histidine residue-not the ionized forms hitherto assumed. These new assignments for the ionization characteristics of the aspartic acid and histidine residues of the catalytic triad lead to a proposed catalytic mechanism that avoids any requirement for unfavorable charge separation. In this view, the histidine residue plays two roles: (i) it provides insulation between water and the buried carboxylate anion of the aspartate, thus ensuring the carboxylate group a hydrophobic environment, and (ii) it provides a relay for net transfer of protons from the serine hydroxyl to the carboxylate anion. The aspartate anion acts as the ultimate base which holds a proton during catalysis. An anionic, rather than a neutral, base has advantages; it both avoids the necessity of charge separation and, by giving the catalytic locus an overall negative charge, assists preferential expulsion of product relative to substrate from the active site of the enzyme. Relaxation measurements (T_I, T_2, and nuclear Overhauser enhancement) indicate that, over the pH range of enzymic activity, the histidine residue is held rigidly within the protein.

Additional Information

© 1973 American Chemical Society. Received June 13, 1973. Contribution No. 4699 from the Church Laboratories of Chemical Biology, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91109. Received June 13, 1973. We wish to acknowledge generous financial support of this research by grants from the U. S. Public Health Service, NIGMS-16424 and NIGMS-10218, and the Medical Research Council of Canada, MA-4409.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023